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Louis J. Lanzerotti | |
|---|---|
| Born | (1938-04-16)April 16, 1938 |
| Education | University of Illinois,Harvard University |
| Scientific career | |
| Fields | physics |
Louis John Lanzerotti (born April 16, 1938) is an American physicist. He is a Distinguished Research Professor ofphysics in theCenter for Solar-Terrestrial Research atNew Jersey Institute of Technology (NJIT) inNewark, New Jersey.[1][2][3]
His principal research interests have included space plasmas, geophysics, and engineering problems related to the impacts of atmospheric and space processes and the space environment on space and terrestrial technologies.
Louis J. Lanzerotti was born and grew up inCarlinville, Illinois. He earned a BS in Engineering Physics in 1960 fromUniversity of Illinois. He obtained his MS and PhD degrees, both in Physics, and both fromHarvard University in 1963 and 1965 respectively.[4]
After serving as a postdoctoral fellow at Harvard University, he joined AT&T'sBell Laboratories in 1965 to engage in engineering and scientific research on Earth’s radiation belts, the existence of which was confirmed a few years earlier byJames Van Allen. AT&T’sTelstar satellites had recently been launched, providing Lanzerotti and his colleagues with data for analyzing and interpreting the radiation belts and their effects of radiation on space systems. This marked the beginning of Lanzerotti’s leadership in the field now called "space weather".[5] Lanzerotti's work led to him being named aDistinguished Member of Technical Staff atLucent Technologies.
Lanzerotti worked with multiple satellite programs and space missions, including theATS-1 andATS-3 communications satellites, the interplanetary IMP 4 and IMP 5explorer missions, theVoyager missions to the outer planets and interstellar medium, theACE solar wind mission, and theCassini mission to Saturn. Furthermore, Lanzerotti has been awarded many NSF research grants[6] including as theprincipal investigator for instruments aboard theUlysses mission over the poles of the Sun, theGalileo mission to Jupiter, and more recently theVan Allen Probes, launched in 2012 to study Earth's radiation belts.[7] He retired in 2002 and remained a consultant to Alcatel-Lucent through 2008. In 2002, he was appointed a Distinguished Research Professor of Physics in the Center for Solar-Terrestrial Research at the New Jersey Institute of Technology in Newark, New Jersey. He has also served as an adjunct professor of electrical engineering at the University of Florida and as a Regents' lecture at UCLA. He is currentlyDistinguished Research Professor of Physics at theNew Jersey Institute of Technology.
Much of his research has involved close collaborations with telecommunications service providers on commercial satellite and long-haul (principally transoceanic) cables. His research has also involved geomagnetism, solid earth geophysics, and some oceanography. This research has been applied to design and operations of systems associated with spacecraft and cable operations. Lanzerotti has served as principal investigator or co-investigator on several United States NASA interplanetary and planetary missions including ATS-1&3, IMP-4&5, Voyager 1&2, Ulysses, Galileo Orbiter and Entry Probe, ACE, and Cassini. Currently, he is a Principal Investigator with instruments on each of the two spacecraft in the NASA Van Allen Probes mission launched August 2012. He has also conducted geophysical research in the Antarctic and the Arctic beginning in the 1970s, directed largely toward understanding of Earth's upper atmosphere and space environments.
Lanzerotti has served as an associate editor for theJournal of Geophysical Research and is the founding editor of the online journalSpace Weather.
In recognition of his career as a research scientist and engineer, Lanzerotti was appointed by US PresidentGeorge W. Bush to theNational Science Board, the 24-member governing body of theNational Science Foundation (NSF)[8] and served a 6-year term from 2004 to 2010.[9] He served on the board as aBoard Consultant from May 2010 until April 2012. Lanzerotti also led a 12-member panel organized by theNational Research Council (NRC) of theNational Academies to identify possible causes of unintended acceleration in vehicles in the aftermath ofToyota's large automobile recalls.
Lanzerotti has authored or co-authored of more than 500 refereed publications, contributing to research that includes studies of space plasmas and geophysics, and engineering problems related to the impact of atmospheric and space processes (a.k.a. "space weather") on terrestrial and spaceborne technologies.[10] Lanzerotti co-authored a book onradiation belt physics[11] and has co-edited four books. He has eight patents issued or filed.
In addition to his career in science, Lanzerotti served in theHarding Township,New Jersey local government. In the 1980s he was elected to three 3-year terms on his Harding Township, N. J., school board, with 6 years as chair of its curriculum committee and 6 years as vice president. Since 1993 he has served six elected terms on the township governing body, including 3 years as mayor.[12][13]
Member or Chair ~ 40 committees of NASEM (including examples below) 1979-